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The NYT's Unconscionable Decision to Sit on the NSA Story for a Year

by CounterPunch (reposted)
By LAWRENCE R. VELVEL
The one year delay in The New York Times' revelation of the warrantless electronic eavesdropping remains inexplicable. The Times' ombudsman, Byron Calame, wrote last Sunday that the high Times officials involved -- Bill Keller and Arthur Sulzberger -- refused to give any adequate explanation or to answer his questions. It did seem to Calame, however, that in effect they were claiming that to explain would be to give the government leads it could use to track down (and punish) the whistleblowers, the people whom one other writer, Jonathan Alter, believes are the true patriots here because they exposed serious governmental wrongdoing.

Such a claim by Keller and Sulzberger, which is no doubt being made in fact, strikes me as unpersuasive. For as has been discussed here before in regard to Times revelations about planes used for CIA renditions, it is always possible to sufficiently describe events in ways that make it impossible to know the whos and wheres of a situation, yet to know in some depth what occurred. One retreats where necessary to higher levels of abstraction that do not reveal specific actors or places. Not to mention that it is difficult to know how one can reasonably expect the details of the revelations to remain secret for long anyway, when, according to The Times itself, about a dozen government officials were part of the process.

Keller did say, however, that the forthcoming publication of a book by one of the reporters who broke the story, James Risen, a book that apparently would have disclosed the secret surveillance, was not the reason the disclosure article was finally printed. (Calame appeared to display a certain incipient dubiousness about this statement.)

Read More
http://counterpunch.org/velvel01072006.html
§A Former NSA Officer on Domestic Spying
by By JOHN BOMAR
The Squawkers Should be Congratulated

From my days in the Army Security Agency in Vietnam, a branch of the National Security Agency, I learned one clear lesson: "Top Secret" keeps everyone involved, except the very few at the top, completely in the dark.

In such a classified world it is essential that each cog in the wheel be kept completely ignorant of the workings of the other cogs and wheels. Only the "masters" of the system get to see the big plan. Assigning all communications, memos and briefs as "Top Secret" is the perfect way to run a dictatorship.

No one squawks when all they can see is one small piece of the pie being baked. If the pie happens to be a naked grab for power at the cost of liberty, and freedom from government intrusion and intimidation, the cogs never know, until the pie is baked.

Thank goodness that there are men and women with courage and scruples at the top who will "squawk" when the see such a pie being baked. And thank goodness there are reporters and newspapers with the courage to expose such poisonous pies to the people.

The very nature of government is power and control. In times of great fear and trembling and fear mongering to hand over individual power to the state for the sake of "national security" seems prudent. Yet, once taken up, those holding the reins seldom relinquish their new power. It is as if the lust for power, like any dark addiction, only breeds more lust.

More
http://counterpunch.org/bomar01062006.html
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